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Prevalence and correlates of depression and anxiety among patients with HIV onfollow up at Alert Hospital, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia

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dc.contributor.author Getachew Tesfaw1*, Getinet Ayano2, Tadesse Awoke3, Dawit Assefa2, Zelalem Birhanu3, Getenet Miheretie4 and Genet Abebe5
dc.date.accessioned 2019-09-16T08:26:15Z
dc.date.available 2019-09-16T08:26:15Z
dc.date.issued 2019-03-10
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/2413
dc.description.abstract Background: Depression and anxiety disorders are common among people living with Human Immunodeficiency Virus than the non-infected individuals. The co-existence of these disorders are associated with barriers to treatment and worsening medical outcomes, including treatment resistance, increased risk for suicide, greater chance for recurrence and utilization of medical resources and/or increase morbidity and mortality. Therefore, assessing depression and anxiety among HIV patients has a pivotal role for further interventions. Methods: Institution based cross-sectional study was conducted at ALERT hospital May, 2015. Data were collected using a pretested, structured and standardized questionnaire. Systematic sampling technique was used to select the study participants. Binary logistic regression analysis was used to identify associated factors. Odds ratio with 95 % CI was computed to assess the strength of associations. Results: The prevalence of co-morbid depression and anxiety among HIV patients was 24.5 % and prevalence of depression and anxiety among HIV patients was 41.2 % (172) and 32.4 % (135) respectively. Multivariate analysis showed that individual who had perceived HIV stigma (AOR = 3.60, 95 % CI (2.23, 5.80), poor social support (AOR = 2.02, 95 % CI (1.25, 3.27), HIV stage III (AOR = 2.80, 95 % CI (1.50, 5.21) and poor medication adherence (AOR = 1.61, 95 % CI (1.02, 2.55) were significantly associated with depression. Being female (AOR = 3.13, 95 % CI (1.80, 5.44), being divorced (AOR = 2.51, 95 % CI (1.26, 5.00), having co morbid TB (AOR = 2.74, 95 % CI (1.37, 5.47) and perceived HIV stigma (AOR = 4.00, 95 % CI (2.40, 6.69) were also significantly associated with anxiety. Conclusion: Prevalence of depression and anxiety was high. Having perceived HIV stigma, HIV Stage III, poor social support and poor medication adherence were associated with depression. Whereas being female, being divorced and having co morbid TB and perceived HIV stigma were associated with anxiety. Ministry of health should give training on how to screen anxiety and depression among HIV patients and should develop guidelines to screen and treat depression and anxiety among HIV patients. en_US
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.subject Depression, Anxiety, HIV/AIDS en_US
dc.title Prevalence and correlates of depression and anxiety among patients with HIV onfollow up at Alert Hospital, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia en_US
dc.type Article en_US


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